Mar Negro

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Mar neg ca.JPG
Mar Negro
Career (Spain) Spain
Name: Mar Negro
Namesake: Black Sea
Owner: Compañía Marítima Del Nervión
Builder: Euskalduna of Bilbao
Launched: 1930
Fate: Requisitioned by the Spanish navy, 1936
Career Ensign of Nationalist Spain (1938-1939)
Operator: Spanish Nationalist navy
Builder: SECN
Commissioned: 20 May 1938
Out of service: 19 October 1939
Reclassified: Auxiliary cruiser, 1937
Fate: Returned to original owner
General characteristics
Displacement: 6,632 tn
Length: 123.39 metres (404.8 ft)
Beam: 16.61 metres (54.5 ft)
Draught: 7.8 metres (26 ft)
Propulsion: 2x6cyl Diesel; 7,600 hp (5,670 kW)
Speed: 15-knot (28 km/h)
Range: 60,000 nmi (110,000 km) at 10 knots (19 km/h)
Armament: 4x150 mm
4x88 mm AA
4x47 mm AA
3x20 mm AA
three depth charge launchers

The Auxiliary cruiser Mar Negro was an armed merchantman of the Nationalist Spanish navy during the Spanish Civil War. The cargo ship was launched in 1930 along with her sister ship Mar Cantábrico, and after five years on the Compañía Marítima Del Nervión company, she was first requisitioned by the Republican navy in 1936. Captured by a group of Nationalist sympathizers off Algeria in 1937, she entered in service in 1938 after being converted to an auxiliary cruiser.

Civilian career

The Mar Negro was built in 1930 along with her sister ship. She was a 6,632-ton motor vessel and was part of a series of four ships of different tonnage. Two of them were 4,700-ton steamers (Mar Blanco and Mar Caribe), while Mar Negro and Mar Cantábrico were propelled by two diesel engines. The merchantmen were owned by the Compañía Marítima del Nervión, based at Bilbao.[1] The cargo vessels were engaged in trade between Spain and US ports at the Gulf of Mexico. Both of them would ended up as auxiliary cruisers of the Nationalist navy.[2]

Under Republican flag

At the beginning of the war in 1936, Mar Negro was moored at Barcelona, a city which remained under the control of the Government. She was fitted out as a troop transport, and was one of the Republican ships which took part of the ill-fated landing on Mallorca on August 1936. Months later, she became involved in the maritime traffic between the Soviet Union and the Spanish Republic, and survived the attack of an Italian submarine.[2]

Career as Nationalist auxiliary cruiser

In September 1937, the ship, bound to Barcelona from Odessa, was diverted by her captain and part of the crew towards Cagliari, Sardinia, where the Nationalist had an improvised naval base with the support of Fascist Italy. After seeing some activity as a supply ship, the merchant was converted into a naval unit at the same shipyard where she and her sister had been built, the SECN facilities on the Nervion river, near Bilbao. She was equipped with four 152 mm main guns, four 88 mm, four 47 mm Armstrong and three 20 mm Scotti and three depth-charge launchers.[3] Completed on May 1938, the auxiliary cruiser joined the maritime blockade on Republican ports in the Mediterranean.[2] Between 19 and 22 December 1939, the Mar Negro seized three Greek steamers in short succession near the channel of Sicily; the tanker Atlas, and the freighters Aris and Oropus, without opposition of non-intervention forces.[4]

She landed the 105 Infantry division on Mahon, Minorca, after the Republican surrender of this island, on 9 February 1939, with the support of the minelayer Jupiter.[5]

After the fall of Catalonia, she led a naval parade off Tarragona with General Franco aboard on 22 February 1939.[2][6]

She took part of the aborted landing on Cartagena on 6 March, when she assisted the Mar Cantábrico in the rescue of a German flying boat damaged by Republican aircraft and the capture of an armed tug.[7]

End of the war

On 8 March 1939, Franco’s government decreed a ban on shipping around three miles from the coast of Levante, between the ports of Adra and Sagunto. After objections from the British government, the Nationalists soften this declaration by replacing the word “ban” for “restrictions” to shipping. Admiral Moreno, commander in chief of the Nationalist fleet, also played down the scale of the operation during a private meeting with the British consul at Palma de Mallorca. Indeed, the Nationalist deployment was reduced to submarine patrols around Cartagena and the presence of an auxiliary cruiser and a destroyer off Valencia.[8] In the last case, there was a rotation between the auxiliary cruiser Mar Cantábrico and Mar Negro and the old destroyers Ceuta and Melilla.[9]

Incident with HMS Sussex

On 16 March 1939, two incidents between the Mar Negro and the British heavy cruiser HMS Sussex took place off Valencia, with the result of a British steamer captured and another damaged. The Spanish auxiliary cruiser also suffered some scratches on her stern in the aftermath.

File:HMS Sussex (96).jpg
Heavy cruiser HMS Sussex

The Mar Negro and the Italian-built WWI destroyer Melilla were enforcing the blockade outside Valencia’s port. Shortly before the departure of Melilla back to Palma for refueling, they spotted a cargo ship steaming for Valencia. She was the British freighter Stangate, of 1,289 ton. At 10:00 AM, while clearing for action, the cruiser’s commander warned the vessel that she will be fired on if she enters Spanish waters. Apparently ignoring the threat, Stangate was within the three miles limit by 10:30. The vessel was maneuvering near the beach of Saler, where the Republicans had mounted a 381 mm battery, which kept silent during the incident. Then Mar Negro’s commander ordered the merchantman to stop, but her captain steered to the east, toward international waters. The Stangate eventually came to a stop outside the three miles, approximately at 39°22′36″N 0°15′17″W / 39.37667°N 0.25472°W / 39.37667; -0.25472. At the same time, the British cruiser HMS Sussex appeared on scene. Mar Negro´s commander reacted quickly: a prize crew of 13 men was dispatched by boat to board the British cargo ship, after the auxiliary cruiser got close to the Stangate. The merchant was then taken under control by the Nationalist warship. Sussex’s commander requested an explanation regarding the position of Stangate at the time of her capture, and sent a party on board the British vessel. The officer in charge of the party, after realising that the ship was now manned by the Spaniards, communicated the news to his superior, who eventually conceded the capture. The Stangate was then driven to Palma by the prize crew at 2:00 PM. During the evening of that day, while on patrol off Sagunto, the Mar Negro spotted another British steamer, the Stanhope, just outside territorial waters. Nevertheless, the Mar Negro ordered the ship to stop, on the basis that the merchant had departed from Valencia, thus breaching the restrictions on shipping around the three miles zone. The captain of the merchantman refused to submit, and made a distress call to HMS Sussex. A stand-off ensued, which ended abruptly at 8:30 PM when the British cargo, according to the Spanish version, attempted to ram Mar Negro. The Nationalist warship maneuvered to port to avoid the collision, but the port bow of the merchant bounced her port quarter off. The incident resulted in some damaged on both ships. All units involved fled the scene afterwards, the Stanhope with the help of HMS Sussex.[10][11][12]

The Mar Negro was also mentioned in the House of Commons on 20 March 1939 in connection with the confinement of seven British subjects on board the cruiser. They were members of the crew of the small British steamer Stangrove, of 550 ton. The vessel had been captured in February off Cap de Creus by the Nationalist gunboat Dato, which was patrolling Catalonia’s coast from Palamos to the French border assisted by the minelayer Vulcano. The Stangrove was sent first to Barcelona and then to Palma, where she was lost under suspicious circumstances, wrecked by a gale. Her master, Captain William Richards, died in the incident. The ship was saved by the Spanish right after the war, and subsequently renamed Castilla del Oro and later Condestable.[13][14][15] The Stangate was the last merchantman captured at high seas during the Spanish civil war.[16] The cargo ship and her crew were held by the Spanish authorities several weeks after the end of the war at Palma,[17] where she remained under the supervision of the British consul until her release.[18]

Fall of Gandía

On 25 March 1939, Mar Negro rotated duties with her sister ship Mar Cantábrico as usual. Meanwhile, on the political front, secret negotiations between Franco and Colonel Casado, a Republican leader who had taken control of the government after a coup against the communist party, were going on. These talks included the mediation of the British consul at Valencia, Mr. Godden. Franco gave unwritten assurances that he will not ordered the occupation of Madrid to his army before the main Republican anti-communist leader came to exile. The agreement also implied the evacuation by sea of a large number of Republican sympathizers from the port of Gandia, south of Valencia. The British manager of this port, a Mr. Apfel, was a key figure in the rescue of refugees, who were taken a board the British cruisers HMS Galatea and HMS Sussex, as well as the hospital ship Maine and several freighters. Conversely, the deal allowed the repatriation of Italian prisoners still held by the Republicans in British ships bounded for Palma.[19] Indeed, just hours before her replacement by Mar Negro, the Mar Cantábrico stopped and searched the London-registered Stanland, but following orders from the Nationalist high command the auxiliary cruiser allowed her to proceed to Valencia.[9]

On 26 March there were three minor incidents with units of the French navy, and on the 27 the cruiser successfully protected a Nationalist flying boat which was being chased by the still active Republican air force. The enemy aircraft were forced to disengage by the 88 mm guns of the Mar Negro.[20] On 29 March, the cruiser headed for Gandía, where the evacuation sanctioned by Franco was taking place. After the last refugee was on board the British vessels, a party of 22 men, led by the 2º commander of the Mar Negro landed in a boat. They took control of the port and the hulls of the Spanish steamer Vicente, of 534 ton, the British Dellwyn of 1,420 and a dredger, all of them sunk in shallow waters.[21] The cargo ships were later raised and put in service under Spanish Nationalist flag, the Dellwyn under the name Castillo Montesa.[22] Before returning to Gandía and get some time to rest, the auxiliary cruiser made a full reconnaissance of the small ports of Denia and Jávea. On 31 March they informed to the British consul, after a request by the commander of HMS Galatea, that all Spanish ports were open to British shipping.[21] The Mar Negro eventually returned to civilian service on October 1939, seven months after the war was over.[2]

Notes

  1. Compañía Marítima del Nervión (Spanish)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Vida Marítima (Spanish)
  3. González Etchegaray, page 203
  4. Moreno, page 2589
  5. Salas Larrazábal, Ramón & Jesús (1986). Historia general de la Guerra de España. Rialp, p. 393. ISBN 8432123404 (Spanish)
  6. Bargoni, Franco(1995). La Participación Naval Italiana en la Guerra Civil Española (1936-1939). Instituto de Historia y Cultura Naval, p. 452. ISBN 8478233482 (Spanish)
  7. Moreno, page 2998
  8. Gretton, Peter (1984). The forgotten factor: The Naval Aspects of the Spanish civil war. Oxford University Press, p. 468
  9. 9.0 9.1 Moreno, page 3196
  10. Moreno, pp. 3129-3131
  11. Canberra’ s Times, 20 March 1939
  12. Arias, Fernando (1999). La Valencia de los años 30. Entre el paraiso y el infierno. Carena Editors, S.l., pp. 234-235. ISBN 8487398359 (Spanish)
  13. Moreno, page 3064
  14. House of Commons, Debate of 20 March 1939
  15. Canberra´s Times, 20 February 1939
  16. Moreno, page 3264
  17. House of Commons debates, 24 April 1939
  18. Gretton, page 469
  19. Bahamonde Magro, Ángel & others (2000). Así terminó la guerra de España. Marcial Pons Historia, pp. 475-484. ISBN 8495379090 (Spanish)
  20. Moreno page 3197
  21. 21.0 21.1 Moreno, page 3198
  22. Heaton, Paul Michael (1985). Welsh blockade runners in the Spanish Civil War. Starling press, p. 104. ISBN 0950771457

References

  • Moreno de Alborán y de Reyna, Salvador (1998). La guerra silenciosa y silenciada: historia de la campaña naval durante la guerra de 1936-39, Volume 4, Part 2. Ed. Alborán. ISBN 8492369108 (Spanish)
  • González Etchegaray, Rafael (1977). La Marina Mercante y el Trafico Maritimo en la Guerra Civil. Editorial San Martin, Madrid. ISBN 8471401509 (Spanish)